In hopes of attracting nontraditional defense business, the Army considers paying for their travel to research labs.
The Air Force Space Command has the job of detecting and characterizing threats to U.S. space systems. Now it's looking for more contractor help in that effort.
After a nearly four-year battle, DoD workers traveling for more than 30 days will get full locality pay.
The Navy is letting some enlisted sailors stay longer if they accept difficult-to-fill assignments.
Veterans Affairs Secretary Robert Wilkie appointed Karen Brazell as the new principal executive director for the Office of Acquisition, Logistics and Construction.
With less than two months before the Homeland Security Department’s Oct. 16 deadline, the number of agency domains still not using the DMARC protocol is more than 200.
Drug interdiction and spectacular rescues using gleaming white ships get the Coast Guard attention, but no so much for its day-to-day activities.
President Donald Trump has called for the creation of a space force as a separate military service, but there hasn't been a new military service since 1947.
The Army’s new Futures Command is on its way to becoming reality, just as the service prepares for 2020.
In today's Federal Newscast, the Government Publishing Offices takes another stab at finding a vendor to print and mail 2020 census forms.
The Pentagon is using its Other Transaction Authority for "nontraditional" contractors to replace the Defense Travel System. But the recipient is a Fortune 500 company.
At a National Guard facility in southeastern Indiana, the Army is training cyber soldiers in ways that show them how their keystrokes impact the real world.
A new report from Sen. McCaskill's office says the Trump administration's 2019 budget would cut five Inspectors General office's budgets and give nine IG offices less than what they requested.
The Army is starting a limited user test for its Credentialing Assistance Program to encompass 1,500 soldiers.
The 2019 National Defense Authorization Act is mostly about Defense Department matters but at more than 1,000 pages it contains provisions for all federal agencies.